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North American Small Wind Turbine Certification . Larry Sherwood Executive Director Small Wind Certification Council Community Wind Across America October 27, 2010. Problem. Small turbine performance specifications are not standardized
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North AmericanSmall Wind Turbine Certification Larry Sherwood Executive Director Small Wind Certification Council Community Wind Across AmericaOctober 27, 2010
Problem • Small turbine performance specifications are not standardized • Agencies and utilities providing financial assistance are asking for performance assurance to increase support for incentives • Consumers need greater certainty of function, performance, and durability • Less than half of of turbine models on the market have been tested
Why Certification? • Allow consumer comparison of products • Funding agencies will gain greater confidence that small turbines installed with public assistance have been tested for safety, function, performance and durability and meet requirements of consensus standards • Consumer protection and industry credibility
Terms • Standard • Certification • Accreditation
SWCC certifies Mechanical Strength, Durability, Function & Performance of turbine systemto new AWEA standard NRTLs certify ElectricalSafety of Turbine & Controller (new UL Standards in development) PE certifies Tower & Foundation NRTLs certify Inverter to IEEE 1547/UL 1741 NABCEP certifies the Installer Grid-tie Small Wind Turbine in the US Wired per National Electrical Code (NEC) (new article in 2011)
SWCC: Small Wind Certification Council • New independent, third-party certification body to serve North America • Certify that small wind turbines (SWTs) meet the requirements of the new AWEA Small Wind Turbine Performance and Safety Standard • Will be used as state-level eligibility
What Certification…. Is: Is not: An assertion that the Small Wind Turbine is durable, reliable, quiet, loud, safe, efficient, good, bad, failure-proof or perfect Provided by AWEA • An independent confirmation that the Small Wind Turbine has been tested and designed per the requirements of the AWEA Standard
SWT Manufacturer the Standard Test Organization(field testing) Certifies Compliance
SWCC Start-up Funding • U.S. Department of Energy • New York State Energy Research and Development Authority • Applicant Fees • Previous Organizational Development through Interstate Renewable Energy Council • Nevada State Office of Energy, NYSERDA, Energy Trust of Oregon, Wisconsin Division of Energy, CanWEA (funds from NRCan), Casper College (Wyoming), Iowa Energy Center, National Renewable Energy Laboratory
What is the AWEA Standard? • AWEA Small Wind Turbine Performance and Safety Standard (AWEA Standard 9.1 – 2009) • Harmonized with the BWEA Standard (some differences such as acoustics) • Incorporates, with modifications, existing IEC standards for small wind turbines • Written to ensure the quality of the wind turbine can be assessed while imposing only reasonable costs and difficulty
Equipment Eligibility • Per the AWEA standard • Newly manufactured, electricity-producing wind turbines with a swept area up to 200 m2 • 200m2 ~ 16m diameter rotor ~ 65 kW (or less) • Horizontal and vertical axis turbines are eligible
Towers/Foundations Except as required*, towers and foundations are not part of the system in the AWEA Standard * Report tower specs; duration tower must meet specs; observe turbine/tower dynamics; dynamic analysis sometime required 12
SWCC Certification based on… • an evaluation of: • Wind turbine design (Structural Analysis) • Field testing
Field Testing • Power Performance • Power Curve • Energy Curve • Rated Annual Energy • Rated Power • Acoustics • Sound pressure levels • Rated Sound Level • Safety and Function • Pass/Fail • Duration • Pass/Fail
Qualified Testing Organizations • Accredited Test Organization • Currently only two accredited labs in North America (NREL and DNV) • Non-Accredited Test Organization • On-site audits • Manufacturer Testing • On-site audits plus further scrutiny • Testing outside North America is acceptable
Field Testing • SWCC Test Organization List now has 26 test organizations that intend to participate in field testing for Certification • 4 new NREL supported Regional Test Centers
To see some results/reports:NREL Independent Testing www.nrel.gov/wind/smallwind/independent_testing.html
Certification Process Summary • Notice of Intent to Submit an Application • Certification Agreement(Turbines listed as Application Pending) • Field Testing and design analysis performed (~ min 6 months, typically one year to complete) • Test reports submitted with Certification Application • Technical review • Certification Decision • Granted; Info added to website
Multiple Certifications • What if the mfg intends to pursue: • Type certification to IEC 61400 Standards; • Certification to BWEA Standard for MCS in UK; and • SWCC certification for North America ? • Coordinate with Cert. Bodies and Test Organization to understand requirements whendeveloping test plans • Conditional Temporary Certification may be an SWCC option if turbine is tested to IEC or BWEA standards 19
Pathways to SWCC Certification Testing & Analysis to AWEA 9.1 by accredited testing organization Testing & Analysis to AWEA 9.1 bynon-accredited testing organization SWCC performs Test Site Evaluation Certification to AWEA 9.1 by other Certification Body Work from other Certification Bodies may be transferrable Submit SWCC Certification Application Submit SWCC Notice of Intent to Apply for Certification (NOI) and Preliminary Review Fee Certification to Microgeneration Certification Scheme (MCS) Work from other Certification Bodies may be transferrable Additional requirements may apply Type Certification to IEC-61400 Standards Work from other Certification Bodies may be transferrable Additional requirements may apply
SWCC Certification Label • Rated Annual Energy (kWh) • @ annual average wind speed of 11.2 mph (5 m/s) • Rated Sound Level (dBA) • Sound pressure level not exceeded 95% of time with average wind speed of 11.2 mph (5 m/s) at 60 meters from rotor • Rated Power (kW) • @ 24.6 mph (11 m/s)
SWCC Program Status • Began to Accept Notices of Intent in February 2010 • 19 turbine models with Application Pending • Expect 1-3 certifications by first quarter 2011 • More certifications in late 2011
Preparing to pursue… SWCC Accreditation • SWCC preparing to pursue A2LA Accreditation for Product Certification Bodies • Using ISO/IEC Guide 65 as a guide for policies 24
State & Utility Incentives • SWCC as a means to qualify turbines for incentive eligibility • Energy Trust of Oregon • Focus on Energy (Wisconsin) • New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) • Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (MassCEC) • California Energy Commission (CEC) • Colorado, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, Vermont
Benefits of Certification • Certification labels ease consumer comparison of products • Funding agencies and utilities will gain greater confidence that small turbines installed with public assistance have been tested for safety, function, performance and durability and meet requirements of consensus standards • Certification can help prevent unethical marketing and false claims, thereby ensuring consumer protection and industry credibility
Why Certification? SatisfiedOwners of Well-behaved Turbines Filter Turbines thru Testing/Certification
For more information Answers to Frequently Asked Questions www.smallwindcertification.org/faq.html Sign up for mailing list www.smallwindcertification.org Click “Get E-mail Updates”
Questions? Larry Sherwood Executive Director, SWCC Larry@smallwindcertification.org 518-213-9441